I want to give expression to the relationship between the real, outside world and the internal world of awareness and imagination that is created through the experience of the outside world.

While it looks at first as though the world is controlled by order and various systems, it also contains disorder, an inherent chaos that is capable of destroying that order. Conversely, when disorder and chaos are prevalent, the world possesses the innate strength to generate order and harmony.

In dealings with the world it is necessary to have two perspectives – one on the surface that appears in reality and the other a perspective that cuts through the surface to what lies behind. The surface that appears to us as reality is a necessary existence – it is something that transcends the consciousness and is thus capable of compelling change in each individual. That which lies behind the surface can be detected in the form of individual consciousness or imagination, and sometimes as what might be called universality. But if you have only a perspective on reality, the surface, then you will focus too much on concreteness, so you will eventually lose the imagination necessary to capture the entirety, the premises that form the foundation of the world. Likewise, if you have only a perspective on what lies behind, then you will focus on abstraction and you will lose the means to apply whatyou see there to the real world.

Combining those dual perspectives will allow me for the first time to avoid being controlled by the outside world or swallowed up by the internal world. A kind of creative expression that is both real and creative will become possible.